Brent Start ESOL cuts hit the voiceless
and reveal government hypocrisy Guest blog for Wembley matters by 'Enda Mess'
It's good to have the opportunity to
raise awareness of the severe cuts that are affecting Adult Education and, very
recently, ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages) courses in particular.
These cuts often go unnoticed as those who take up these services are often
those whose voices are least likely to be heard. However, the classes are
highly valued and often vital to those who use them.
At Brent Start (formerly Brent Adult
and Community Education Service - BACES) the recent central government cuts
mean that 40% of ESOL provision will be cut - with job losses to match! The cut
has been very sudden - the government announced the withdrawal of all funding
for classes for those on Job Seekers Allowance with immediate effect at the end
of July - just when everyone was finishing for the year and all timetables and
staffing was planned.
Despite the fact that services in other
areas seem to be managing to hold off from making immediate redundancies, here
in Brent the decision has been made act very swiftly in implementing the cuts
and staff are returning to work to find they may not have a job by mid October.
What were known as the JCP (Job Centre
Plus) classes were problematic for most adult educatorsand trade
unionists in that they were 'mandated' - the new euphemism for compulsory.
Students were referred from the Job Centre and there could be sanctions for non
attendance. However, their withdrawal removes an opportunity for free classes
and 40% of any provision is a huge loss.
This of course comes at a time when the
plight of refugees and migrants is very topical. The cut was announced the
day after Cameron said: 'At the moment we
have parts of the country where opportunities remain limited ... where language
remains a real barrier, where too many women from minority communities remain
trapped outside the workforce, and where educational attainment is low'. Such decisions
show the hypocrisy of the current government’s stated aim to help
individuals develop skills in order to gain jobs and communicate with others
and ‘lift the horizons of some of our most isolated and deprived
communities’. (David Cameron’s extremism speech 20/07/2015)
Since then however, many thousands of
people have connected with the humanitarian aspect of the refugee situation and
have clearly shown that they do not support the government's hostile stand
towards people who are driven to leave what they know behind and take enormous
risks to start a new life for their families.
For me, the huge but often unrecognised
value of adult and community learning (everything from computer classes to
pottery to sign language to childcare courses – as well as ESOL) lies
not just in the structured learning of the courses provided. It provides spaces
and opportunities for a wealth of informal learning to take place. There is a
real diversity of backgrounds amongst those who attend - people's lives overlap
here in a way they seldom do elsewhere and these interactions can create really
positive opportunities for the exchange and building of knowledge, skills and
experience amongst students, that can be empowering way beyond the scope of the
actual course.
We have a very long history in Brent of
providing ESOL classes and it will be a terrible loss to dismantle nearly half
of what has been a strong, committed and thriving department providing a
quality service to the community for many years. ESOL classes provide a way in
for people to access crucial services, participate in education and find work.
They help parents support their children at school. They enable people who,
when they arrive here bring valuable skills and experience of all kinds, to
practise those skills and share that experience for the benefit of us all.
The University and College Union (UCU)
which represents staff teaching in Adult Education as well as FE and HE, is
campaigning against these cuts both locally and nationally and the ‘Action for ESOL’ campaign is also very active
A demonstration has been organised to
protest against the cuts in ESOL classes on
Wednesday 16th September at 5.30,
outside the Department of Business Innovation and Skills (this is where the cuts come from!)
Here is a link to the Facebook page for
this event LINK
Please share, support, come along!
UCU and 'Action for ESOL' will also be attending the ‘Refugees are
Welcome Here’ event on Saturday 12th September.
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Cutting ESOL classes does not seem a very good way for helping induct refugees to 'British values' and feeling welcomed here.
ReplyDeleteA friend and retired school teacher said to me today when I told her of Higher Eudcation cuts at a university I visited yesterday for a staff member's retirement party, "The Tories are selling off and diminishing what is of value in Britain."
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